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Looking Back (look + back)
Selected AbstractsNursing the Community, a Look Back at the 1984 Dialogue Between Virginia A. Henderson and Sherry L. ShamanskyPUBLIC HEALTH NURSING, Issue 4 2007Sarah E. Abrams ABSTRACT Dr. Sherry L. Shamansky, one of the founding editors of Public Health Nursing, interviewed renowned 20th-century leader, Virginia Avenal Henderson (1897,1996), then research associate emeritus at Yale University School of Nursing, about the nursing of "aggregates." Their discussion, originally published in Public Health Nursing, in 1984 (Vol. 1, No. 4), highlights Henderson's views about the scope of nursing, health care organization and funding, and perceived tension between direct care of the sick in the community and preventive activities directed toward communities or populations at risk. Readers familiar with Henderson's influential definition of nursing may find her responses to interview questions helpful in understanding her view of the opportunities and challenges faced by public or community health nurses of the time. [source] A Multidisciplinary Program for Delivering Primary Care to the Underserved Urban Homebound: Looking Back, Moving ForwardJOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 8 2006Kristofer L. Smith BA The coming decades will see a dramatic rise in the number of homebound adults. These individuals will have multiple medical conditions requiring a team of caregivers to provide adequate care. Home-based primary care (HBPC) programs can coordinate and provide such multidisciplinary care. Traditionally, though, HBPC programs have been small because there has been little institutional support for growth. Three residents developed the Mount Sinai Visiting Doctors (MSVD) program in 1995 to provide multidisciplinary care to homebound patients in East Harlem, New York. Over the past 10 years, the program has grown substantially to 12 primary care providers serving more than 1,000 patients per year. The program has met many of its original goals, such as helping patients to live and die at home, decreasing caregiver burden, creating a home-based primary care training experience, and becoming a research leader. These successes and growth have been the result of careful attention to providing high-quality care, obtaining hospital support through the demonstration of an overall positive cost,benefit profile, and securing departmental and medical school support by shouldering significant teaching responsibilities. The following article will detail the development of the program and the current provision of services. The MSVD experience offers a model of growth for faculty and institutions interested in starting or expanding a HBPC program. [source] A Century of Language Teaching and Research: Looking Back and Looking Ahead, Part 2MODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, Issue 1 2001James P. Lantolf First page of article [source] This Special Retrospective: A Century of Language Teaching and Research: Looking Back and Looking AheadMODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, Issue 4 2000Sally Sieloff Magnan No abstract is available for this article. [source] A Century of Language Teaching and Research: Looking Back and Looking AheadMODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, Issue 4 2000James P. Lantolf First page of article [source] Looking Forward by Looking Back: May Day Protests in London and the Strategic Significance of the UrbanANTIPODE, Issue 4 2004Justus Uitermark This paper deals with the question of how oppositional movements can adapt their protest strategies to meet recent socio-spatial transformations. The work of Lefebvre provides several clues as to how an alternative discourse and appropriation of space could be incorporated in such protest strategies. One of the central themes in Lefebvre's work is that the appearances, forms and functions of urban space are constitutive elements of contemporary capitalism and thus that an alternative narrative of urban space can challenge or undermine dominant modes of thinking. What exactly constitutes the "right" kind of alternative discourse or narrative is a matter of both theoretical and practical consideration. The paper analyses one case: the May Day protests in London in 2001, in which a protest group, the Wombles, managed to integrate theoretical insights into their discourse and practice in a highly innovative manner. Since cities, and global cities in particular, play an ever more important role in maintaining the consumption as well as production practices of global capitalism; they potentially constitute local sites where global processes can be identified and criticised. It is shown that the Wombles effectively made use of these possibilities and appropriated the symbolic resources concentrated in London to exercise a "lived critique" of global capitalism. Since the Wombles capitalised on trends that have not yet ended, their strategies show a way forward for future anti-capitalist protests. [source] |