The document outlines the vision and objectives of M.A. Hussey as Vice Chancellor and Dean for Agriculture and Life Sciences at Texas A&M University. The vision is for students, faculty and programs to be the best in the state, nation and world. Key objectives include exemplifying the land-grant mission through internationally recognized teaching, research, extension and service. It also discusses agency and college programs, recruiting and retaining faculty and staff, securing resources, enhancing IT, and goals for 2010 such as implementing recommendations from various reviews and plans. The overall aim is to serve Texas and beyond through excellence in teaching, research, extension and service.
The document discusses the need for a Regional Climate Change Adaptation Knowledge Platform for Asia to address the fragmented and uncoordinated state of adaptation knowledge sharing across the region. The Platform aims to serve as a bridge between networks and initiatives, improve access to analytical information, and promote Asia's adaptation practices. It will develop a regional knowledge sharing system and support national adaptation efforts through activities like an online portal, forums, seminars, and training to help strengthen dissemination and build capacity. The goals are to better link research, policy, and on-the-ground action while blending scientific and traditional knowledge on adaptation.
This document discusses sustainability metrics and benchmarking in higher education. It provides an overview of Sightlines, a company that collects sustainability data from nearly 350 member campuses. The document outlines the steps to benchmarking, including collecting consistent and accurate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions data, selecting an appropriate peer group for comparisons, and using metrics like GHG intensity and efficiency to provide context. It emphasizes normalizing data to peer groups to allow for meaningful performance comparisons over time and moving beyond carbon metrics to assess other sustainability outcomes.
Promoting Innovation and evidenced based approaches to policy makersTed Herbosa
The document discusses promoting innovation and evidence-based approaches to policymakers regarding disaster risk reduction. It provides examples of Project NOAH in the Philippines, which uses science and technology through multi-disciplinary research to develop systems and tools to help prevent and mitigate disasters. The document poses four questions on how research can influence policy decisions, research gaps, enabling access to existing research, and transforming policies to improve disaster program implementation.
The document proposes implementing color-coordinated fall risk identifiers for patients at risk of falls at the Manhattan VA Hospital to potentially decrease falls. It reviews literature finding single interventions like signs or bracelets are less effective than multiple reminders. The proposal is to randomly assign patients scoring high on the Morse Fall Scale to either bright yellow socks/bracelets or a red dot outside their room. Incidences of falls will be compared over 3 months between the two groups to evaluate if color-coordinated identifiers reduce falls more than the current program.
Falls Prevention & Management In Residential Care Setting anne spencer
This document outlines a proposed research study to evaluate the effectiveness of a falls prevention program called "Forever Autumn" implemented in residential care settings. The program was associated with a 35-31% reduction in falls over 4 years in one setting. The study will use a mixed-methods case study design, collecting both qualitative data through staff focus groups and quantitative data from existing intervention records, to better understand how the program reduces falls and inform future falls prevention strategies. Ethics approval has been obtained and data collection is planned to begin in early 2018 at an urban and rural research site after presenting the study.
The document outlines the vision and objectives of M.A. Hussey as Vice Chancellor and Dean for Agriculture and Life Sciences at Texas A&M University. The vision is for students, faculty and programs to be the best in the state, nation and world. Key objectives include exemplifying the land-grant mission through internationally recognized teaching, research, extension and service. It also discusses agency and college programs, recruiting and retaining faculty and staff, securing resources, enhancing IT, and goals for 2010 such as implementing recommendations from various reviews and plans. The overall aim is to serve Texas and beyond through excellence in teaching, research, extension and service.
The document discusses the need for a Regional Climate Change Adaptation Knowledge Platform for Asia to address the fragmented and uncoordinated state of adaptation knowledge sharing across the region. The Platform aims to serve as a bridge between networks and initiatives, improve access to analytical information, and promote Asia's adaptation practices. It will develop a regional knowledge sharing system and support national adaptation efforts through activities like an online portal, forums, seminars, and training to help strengthen dissemination and build capacity. The goals are to better link research, policy, and on-the-ground action while blending scientific and traditional knowledge on adaptation.
This document discusses sustainability metrics and benchmarking in higher education. It provides an overview of Sightlines, a company that collects sustainability data from nearly 350 member campuses. The document outlines the steps to benchmarking, including collecting consistent and accurate greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions data, selecting an appropriate peer group for comparisons, and using metrics like GHG intensity and efficiency to provide context. It emphasizes normalizing data to peer groups to allow for meaningful performance comparisons over time and moving beyond carbon metrics to assess other sustainability outcomes.
Promoting Innovation and evidenced based approaches to policy makersTed Herbosa
The document discusses promoting innovation and evidence-based approaches to policymakers regarding disaster risk reduction. It provides examples of Project NOAH in the Philippines, which uses science and technology through multi-disciplinary research to develop systems and tools to help prevent and mitigate disasters. The document poses four questions on how research can influence policy decisions, research gaps, enabling access to existing research, and transforming policies to improve disaster program implementation.
The document proposes implementing color-coordinated fall risk identifiers for patients at risk of falls at the Manhattan VA Hospital to potentially decrease falls. It reviews literature finding single interventions like signs or bracelets are less effective than multiple reminders. The proposal is to randomly assign patients scoring high on the Morse Fall Scale to either bright yellow socks/bracelets or a red dot outside their room. Incidences of falls will be compared over 3 months between the two groups to evaluate if color-coordinated identifiers reduce falls more than the current program.
Falls Prevention & Management In Residential Care Setting anne spencer
This document outlines a proposed research study to evaluate the effectiveness of a falls prevention program called "Forever Autumn" implemented in residential care settings. The program was associated with a 35-31% reduction in falls over 4 years in one setting. The study will use a mixed-methods case study design, collecting both qualitative data through staff focus groups and quantitative data from existing intervention records, to better understand how the program reduces falls and inform future falls prevention strategies. Ethics approval has been obtained and data collection is planned to begin in early 2018 at an urban and rural research site after presenting the study.
Addressing Anemia Full Spectrum_Koporc_5.11.11CORE Group
The document summarizes the results of the first global NGO deworming inventory. It found that NGOs donated 127.9 million deworming treatments in 2009 but only reported 20.8 million unique treatments to the inventory. A WHO working group concluded the inventory was useful for identifying the scale of NGO deworming activities. It recommended continuing the inventory and encouraging more NGO participation to help coordinate deworming efforts and assess unmet needs.
19 November 2012 - National End of Life Care Programme
The End of Life Care Strategy (2008) identified the need to improve co-ordination of care, recognising that people at the end of life frequently received care from a wide variety of teams and organisations. The development of Locality Registers (now Electronic Palliative Care Co-ordination Systems known as EPaCCS) were identified as a mechanism for enabling co-ordination.
By supporting the elicitation, recording and sharing of people's care preferences, and key details about their care, it is anticipated that EPaCCS will improve the quality of care, with provision meeting people's expressed wishes and preferences. Early findings from the South West SHA Locality Register pilot showed that the vast majority of people on the register were able to die outside of hospital, and in their preferred place of care.
Why EPaCCS?
EPaCCs will contribute to increases in the quality of end of life care individuals receive by improving co-ordination and communication across sectors, ensuring that all those involved in care will be aware of the individuals wishes and preferences as recorded in Advance Care Plans (ACPs) as well as treatment care plans. They contribute to the patient Choice agenda as well as the Quality, Improvement, Productivity and Prevention (QIPP) agenda and improve patient safety by reducing harm through co-ordinated communication in standardised format to reduce the risk of inappropriate interventions.
Building capacity for creating demand in support of malaria prevention and co...Malaria Consortium
Demand creation is the strategic combination of advocacy, communication and mobilisation approaches that seek to achieve increased community awareness of, and demand for, effective malaria prevention and treatment services.
Malaria Consortium's Support to National Malaria Programme (SuNMaP) demand creation strategy for prevention currently focuses on promoting the correct use of long lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) and the use of intermittent preventive therapy (IPT) in pregnant women. For malaria treatment, demand creation focuses on promoting improved testing, prompt and proper use of artemisinin combination therapy (ACT) treatment for individual cases of malaria, and effective home management of fever, together with referrals of severe cases to a higher-level health facility.
This learning paper discusses SuNMap's experiences of planning and implementing demand creation in Nigeria, including SuNMaP's development of a comprehensive malaria communications plan. It presents what worked well and the challenges that remain to scale up demand creation activities and to consolidate the work already done.
This document provides information about the Gi4DM 2018 conference in Istanbul, Turkey. It includes the final programme which focuses on reducing vulnerability through mitigation and adaptation efforts, coordinating globally, and supporting advances in geoinformation. Key takeaways encourage participation in GEO initiatives, highlight open Earth observation data resources, working with national GEO organizations, and attending upcoming GEO events. The document also provides an overview of GEO's work in areas like disasters, climate change, and the Sustainable Development Goals.
The document introduces the COUNTDOWN program, a 5-year, £15M implementation research program funded by DFID to provide evidence for scaling up integrated neglected tropical disease control initiatives. It will consider effective and sustainable strategies for scale-up, factors influencing scale-up success, and strategies for reaching hard-to-reach communities. The research will be conducted across multiple themes and countries in Africa, with the goal of reducing NTD-related morbidity, mortality and poverty by increasing knowledge of and evidence for cost-effective scale-up and control/elimination of NTDs. Initial results are expected to include improved scale-up of MDA programs, knowledge management strategies, and increased research capacity in partner countries.
Revised RED présentation ATN at GHC 290507 reducedLisa Nichols
The document summarizes efforts to strengthen routine vaccination coverage in the districts of Niafunké and Goundam in Mali's Timbuktu region through implementation of the Reach Every District (RED) approach between 2005-2006. Key results included increasing vaccination coverage in Goundam from 15% to 70% and in Niafunké from 35% to 62%. The RED approach strengthened linkages between communities and health services and engaged partners at all levels of planning, implementation, monitoring and resource mobilization, leading to sustained higher vaccination rates. Lessons learned highlighted the importance of regular microplanning, performance agreements between partners, and community health workers in increasing coverage and reducing dropouts.
Results from DRMKC Support System-Spain (Rosa Mata Francès, CP Catalunya and ...OECD Governance
Presentation made at the expert meeting organised jointly by the European Commission, the OECD and the project PLACARD, in Paris 26th -28th October 2016. For more information see www.oecd.org/gov/risk/joint-expert-meeting-on-disaster-loss-data.htm
Moving towards malaria elimination: developing innovative tools for malaria s...Malaria Consortium
In collaboration with the national malaria control programme in Cambodia (CNM), Malaria Consortium developed a diverse set of tools to improve malaria surveillance and to provide the information needed by national and district staff to manage the national malaria programme, respond to malaria outbreaks and individual cases and monitor in real-time the levels of critical malaria supplies at health facilities.
The surveillance tools developed were a mix of routine reporting systems using eHealth and mobile phone-based (mHealth) solutions that would enable resource constrained environments to provide real-time data for immediate action. This learning paper documents the lessons learned in developing an appropriate tool and the specific considerations in the implementation of mHealth solutions.
How do we Achieve Universal Access to Equitable Sanitation & Hygiene By 2030? Driving focus on behaviour change to ensure good hygiene practice and educate on self-sufficient practices to reduce the spread of preventable disease such as diarrhoea. A lead2030 Challenge Supported By Reckitt Benckiser (RB), A ONE YOUNG WORLD INITIATIVE FOR GLOBAL GOALS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT. set by the United Nations General Assembly in 2015. The SDGs are part of Resolution 70/1 of the United Nations General Assembly "Transforming our World the 2030 Agenda".
Zimbabwe has adopted male circumcision as an HIV prevention strategy, with a goal of making services safe, accessible, voluntary and sustainable. A national male circumcision policy was launched in 2009. An initial pilot program has operated 5 sites and circumcised over 6,000 males. Challenges include adequate funding and human resources for scale up. Lessons learned include the importance of stakeholder consultation, a phased scale up approach, and strong demand creation through communication. Moving forward, task shifting to nurses and integration with other HIV programs are recommended. Continued financial support is needed for rollout and impact evaluation.
This research is spearheading the integration of Free & Open Source Software (FOSS) with Open Source Hardware (OSHW) in the field of agri-meteorology applications to disaster risk reduction, flood and droughts. A Do-It-Yourself weather station based on OSHW standards has been developed from local sources in Sri Lanka, reporting by SMS to tank/reservoir managers when rainfall is higher than 10mm/h. These weather stations are soon going to be reprogrammed to report to istSOS, a FOSS web-based Sensor-Observation-Service compliant system, which will collate live reporting of rainfall every hour and before if intensities are dimmed worrying for flood risks. This is both a scientific, technological, and practical challenge to arrive at a very low cost real time disaster risk notification system in places where climate, economy and maintenance supports are themselves other challenges.
Building capacities for the digital transformation of health and care in Euro...Marc Lange
In this presentation, quite a few tools and methods are identified and described, which have in common the objective of digital transformation of health and care systems in Europe, including the integration of care
1) According to data from 1980-2007, 90% of natural disaster events, 70% of casualties, and 75% of economic losses are related to hydro-meteorological hazards like floods and tropical cyclones.
2) The WMO aims to strengthen early warning systems and disaster risk reduction through projects that improve hazard monitoring, risk assessment, and partnerships between national meteorological services and other organizations.
3) Effective early warning systems require coordination between meteorological, hydrological, and other services to issue warnings from national to local levels and support preparedness through disaster risk reduction plans.
Building capacity for universal coverage: malaria control in NigeriaMalaria Consortium
Support to the Nigeria Malaria Programme – is a £50 million five-year UK aid funded programme that works with the government and people of Nigeria to strengthen the national effort to control malaria. The programme began in April 2008, and runs to March 2013. This learning paper describes, in detail, the programmes approach to malaria control and explores the reasons for the programmes success from the perspective of health workers trained by the programme, community members and others.
Since 2008, the Malaria Consortium programme, Support to the Nigeria Malaria Programme (SuNMaP), has been working in Nigeria to strengthen the national effort to control malaria. Among the programme’s activities is the harmonisation of malaria control – which means working with supporting partners locally, nationally and internationally, for the common purpose to reduce the burden of malaria in Nigeria. The paper describes some of SuNMaP’s successes in rolling out harmonisation – such as leading a unified approach to the rollout of a nationwide LLIN campaign rollout, and developing standardised modules for the training of health workers in service delivery and programme management.
UNDP final report + case reports carbon foot printingGraeme Esau
This document summarizes the objectives and key findings of a study measuring the carbon footprint of UNDP-administered Global Fund grants for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria programs in Zimbabwe. The study aimed to apply the carbon footprint methodology developed in an earlier study at a larger scale in Africa. It found that the methodology could be applied to measure emissions from the new grants and inform program development. It also identified five priority areas - including waste management, product carbon factors, and fleet vehicles - for further action to reduce emissions in health programs.
The document summarizes the role and activities of Dr. Shirley Davey as the Connected Health EU Thematic Lead. The role involves increasing Northern Ireland's involvement in Horizon 2020 by building partnerships between universities, SMEs, and health organizations. Dr. Davey provides support for developing connected health research projects and connecting organizations with EU program experts. Recent Northern Ireland projects have been successful in securing Horizon 2020 funding. The document highlights some example projects and their impacts.
We held an improvement collaborative with 19 NHS providers earlier this year to help improve the management of falls in an inpatient setting.
This resource shows case studies of the providers involved in the collaborative.
Approaches to Improve Malaria Outcomes_Debra Prosnitz_4.25.13CORE Group
The document reviews malaria prevention and treatment approaches used in USAID's Child Survival and Health Grants Program projects. It finds that the projects improved key malaria indicators like child ITN use and treatment of fevers, though national data showed smaller gains. Behavior change communication strategies included involvement in developing national tools, replication of effective approaches, and adjustments based on evaluation. Gaps identified included addressing malaria in pregnancy, demand creation with limited supplies, addressing low risk perception, improving materials for illiterate groups, and sustainability planning. Recommendations include more detailed reporting on community mobilization, promoted messages, and interpersonal contact quality and frequency.
Presentation by Christian Ledwell (NAP Global Network) and Cecilia Jones (NAP-Ag) at NAP Expo 2018 in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, as part of the session "Communications Strategies for NAPs."
AIGNA 10th Birthday Celebrations - A Reflection of 10 yearsanne spencer
The document summarizes the history and activities of the All Ireland Gerontological Nurses Association (AIGNA) over the past 10 years since its inception in 2009. It details how AIGNA started as an idea in 2008 to promote excellence in gerontological nursing across Ireland. It has since grown to include annual conferences, masterclasses, a peer-reviewed journal, social media presence, and a website to further its goals of advancing knowledge and care for older people. Reflections from past AIGNA presidents emphasize the important role it has played in raising the profile of gerontological nursing in Ireland.
Role of Advanced Nurse Practitioner in Gerontological Nursing anne spencer
The role of the registered advanced nurse practitioner (RANP) in gerontological nursing is summarized as follows:
1) RANPs aim to support quality and timely care for older adults by performing comprehensive assessments, planning and initiating treatment, promoting healthy aging and independence, and supporting transition to long-term care.
2) Key roles of RANPs include demonstrating autonomous clinical decision-making and expert practice in managing older adult caseloads, engaging in health promotion, and developing standards of care through research, education, and quality improvement.
3) RANPs work to address the complex health issues of an aging population and support aging in place through programs focused on falls prevention, bone health, chronic
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Addressing Anemia Full Spectrum_Koporc_5.11.11CORE Group
The document summarizes the results of the first global NGO deworming inventory. It found that NGOs donated 127.9 million deworming treatments in 2009 but only reported 20.8 million unique treatments to the inventory. A WHO working group concluded the inventory was useful for identifying the scale of NGO deworming activities. It recommended continuing the inventory and encouraging more NGO participation to help coordinate deworming efforts and assess unmet needs.
19 November 2012 - National End of Life Care Programme
The End of Life Care Strategy (2008) identified the need to improve co-ordination of care, recognising that people at the end of life frequently received care from a wide variety of teams and organisations. The development of Locality Registers (now Electronic Palliative Care Co-ordination Systems known as EPaCCS) were identified as a mechanism for enabling co-ordination.
By supporting the elicitation, recording and sharing of people's care preferences, and key details about their care, it is anticipated that EPaCCS will improve the quality of care, with provision meeting people's expressed wishes and preferences. Early findings from the South West SHA Locality Register pilot showed that the vast majority of people on the register were able to die outside of hospital, and in their preferred place of care.
Why EPaCCS?
EPaCCs will contribute to increases in the quality of end of life care individuals receive by improving co-ordination and communication across sectors, ensuring that all those involved in care will be aware of the individuals wishes and preferences as recorded in Advance Care Plans (ACPs) as well as treatment care plans. They contribute to the patient Choice agenda as well as the Quality, Improvement, Productivity and Prevention (QIPP) agenda and improve patient safety by reducing harm through co-ordinated communication in standardised format to reduce the risk of inappropriate interventions.
Building capacity for creating demand in support of malaria prevention and co...Malaria Consortium
Demand creation is the strategic combination of advocacy, communication and mobilisation approaches that seek to achieve increased community awareness of, and demand for, effective malaria prevention and treatment services.
Malaria Consortium's Support to National Malaria Programme (SuNMaP) demand creation strategy for prevention currently focuses on promoting the correct use of long lasting insecticidal nets (LLINs) and the use of intermittent preventive therapy (IPT) in pregnant women. For malaria treatment, demand creation focuses on promoting improved testing, prompt and proper use of artemisinin combination therapy (ACT) treatment for individual cases of malaria, and effective home management of fever, together with referrals of severe cases to a higher-level health facility.
This learning paper discusses SuNMap's experiences of planning and implementing demand creation in Nigeria, including SuNMaP's development of a comprehensive malaria communications plan. It presents what worked well and the challenges that remain to scale up demand creation activities and to consolidate the work already done.
This document provides information about the Gi4DM 2018 conference in Istanbul, Turkey. It includes the final programme which focuses on reducing vulnerability through mitigation and adaptation efforts, coordinating globally, and supporting advances in geoinformation. Key takeaways encourage participation in GEO initiatives, highlight open Earth observation data resources, working with national GEO organizations, and attending upcoming GEO events. The document also provides an overview of GEO's work in areas like disasters, climate change, and the Sustainable Development Goals.
The document introduces the COUNTDOWN program, a 5-year, £15M implementation research program funded by DFID to provide evidence for scaling up integrated neglected tropical disease control initiatives. It will consider effective and sustainable strategies for scale-up, factors influencing scale-up success, and strategies for reaching hard-to-reach communities. The research will be conducted across multiple themes and countries in Africa, with the goal of reducing NTD-related morbidity, mortality and poverty by increasing knowledge of and evidence for cost-effective scale-up and control/elimination of NTDs. Initial results are expected to include improved scale-up of MDA programs, knowledge management strategies, and increased research capacity in partner countries.
Revised RED présentation ATN at GHC 290507 reducedLisa Nichols
The document summarizes efforts to strengthen routine vaccination coverage in the districts of Niafunké and Goundam in Mali's Timbuktu region through implementation of the Reach Every District (RED) approach between 2005-2006. Key results included increasing vaccination coverage in Goundam from 15% to 70% and in Niafunké from 35% to 62%. The RED approach strengthened linkages between communities and health services and engaged partners at all levels of planning, implementation, monitoring and resource mobilization, leading to sustained higher vaccination rates. Lessons learned highlighted the importance of regular microplanning, performance agreements between partners, and community health workers in increasing coverage and reducing dropouts.
Results from DRMKC Support System-Spain (Rosa Mata Francès, CP Catalunya and ...OECD Governance
Presentation made at the expert meeting organised jointly by the European Commission, the OECD and the project PLACARD, in Paris 26th -28th October 2016. For more information see www.oecd.org/gov/risk/joint-expert-meeting-on-disaster-loss-data.htm
Moving towards malaria elimination: developing innovative tools for malaria s...Malaria Consortium
In collaboration with the national malaria control programme in Cambodia (CNM), Malaria Consortium developed a diverse set of tools to improve malaria surveillance and to provide the information needed by national and district staff to manage the national malaria programme, respond to malaria outbreaks and individual cases and monitor in real-time the levels of critical malaria supplies at health facilities.
The surveillance tools developed were a mix of routine reporting systems using eHealth and mobile phone-based (mHealth) solutions that would enable resource constrained environments to provide real-time data for immediate action. This learning paper documents the lessons learned in developing an appropriate tool and the specific considerations in the implementation of mHealth solutions.
How do we Achieve Universal Access to Equitable Sanitation & Hygiene By 2030? Driving focus on behaviour change to ensure good hygiene practice and educate on self-sufficient practices to reduce the spread of preventable disease such as diarrhoea. A lead2030 Challenge Supported By Reckitt Benckiser (RB), A ONE YOUNG WORLD INITIATIVE FOR GLOBAL GOALS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT. set by the United Nations General Assembly in 2015. The SDGs are part of Resolution 70/1 of the United Nations General Assembly "Transforming our World the 2030 Agenda".
Zimbabwe has adopted male circumcision as an HIV prevention strategy, with a goal of making services safe, accessible, voluntary and sustainable. A national male circumcision policy was launched in 2009. An initial pilot program has operated 5 sites and circumcised over 6,000 males. Challenges include adequate funding and human resources for scale up. Lessons learned include the importance of stakeholder consultation, a phased scale up approach, and strong demand creation through communication. Moving forward, task shifting to nurses and integration with other HIV programs are recommended. Continued financial support is needed for rollout and impact evaluation.
This research is spearheading the integration of Free & Open Source Software (FOSS) with Open Source Hardware (OSHW) in the field of agri-meteorology applications to disaster risk reduction, flood and droughts. A Do-It-Yourself weather station based on OSHW standards has been developed from local sources in Sri Lanka, reporting by SMS to tank/reservoir managers when rainfall is higher than 10mm/h. These weather stations are soon going to be reprogrammed to report to istSOS, a FOSS web-based Sensor-Observation-Service compliant system, which will collate live reporting of rainfall every hour and before if intensities are dimmed worrying for flood risks. This is both a scientific, technological, and practical challenge to arrive at a very low cost real time disaster risk notification system in places where climate, economy and maintenance supports are themselves other challenges.
Building capacities for the digital transformation of health and care in Euro...Marc Lange
In this presentation, quite a few tools and methods are identified and described, which have in common the objective of digital transformation of health and care systems in Europe, including the integration of care
1) According to data from 1980-2007, 90% of natural disaster events, 70% of casualties, and 75% of economic losses are related to hydro-meteorological hazards like floods and tropical cyclones.
2) The WMO aims to strengthen early warning systems and disaster risk reduction through projects that improve hazard monitoring, risk assessment, and partnerships between national meteorological services and other organizations.
3) Effective early warning systems require coordination between meteorological, hydrological, and other services to issue warnings from national to local levels and support preparedness through disaster risk reduction plans.
Building capacity for universal coverage: malaria control in NigeriaMalaria Consortium
Support to the Nigeria Malaria Programme – is a £50 million five-year UK aid funded programme that works with the government and people of Nigeria to strengthen the national effort to control malaria. The programme began in April 2008, and runs to March 2013. This learning paper describes, in detail, the programmes approach to malaria control and explores the reasons for the programmes success from the perspective of health workers trained by the programme, community members and others.
Since 2008, the Malaria Consortium programme, Support to the Nigeria Malaria Programme (SuNMaP), has been working in Nigeria to strengthen the national effort to control malaria. Among the programme’s activities is the harmonisation of malaria control – which means working with supporting partners locally, nationally and internationally, for the common purpose to reduce the burden of malaria in Nigeria. The paper describes some of SuNMaP’s successes in rolling out harmonisation – such as leading a unified approach to the rollout of a nationwide LLIN campaign rollout, and developing standardised modules for the training of health workers in service delivery and programme management.
UNDP final report + case reports carbon foot printingGraeme Esau
This document summarizes the objectives and key findings of a study measuring the carbon footprint of UNDP-administered Global Fund grants for HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria programs in Zimbabwe. The study aimed to apply the carbon footprint methodology developed in an earlier study at a larger scale in Africa. It found that the methodology could be applied to measure emissions from the new grants and inform program development. It also identified five priority areas - including waste management, product carbon factors, and fleet vehicles - for further action to reduce emissions in health programs.
The document summarizes the role and activities of Dr. Shirley Davey as the Connected Health EU Thematic Lead. The role involves increasing Northern Ireland's involvement in Horizon 2020 by building partnerships between universities, SMEs, and health organizations. Dr. Davey provides support for developing connected health research projects and connecting organizations with EU program experts. Recent Northern Ireland projects have been successful in securing Horizon 2020 funding. The document highlights some example projects and their impacts.
We held an improvement collaborative with 19 NHS providers earlier this year to help improve the management of falls in an inpatient setting.
This resource shows case studies of the providers involved in the collaborative.
Approaches to Improve Malaria Outcomes_Debra Prosnitz_4.25.13CORE Group
The document reviews malaria prevention and treatment approaches used in USAID's Child Survival and Health Grants Program projects. It finds that the projects improved key malaria indicators like child ITN use and treatment of fevers, though national data showed smaller gains. Behavior change communication strategies included involvement in developing national tools, replication of effective approaches, and adjustments based on evaluation. Gaps identified included addressing malaria in pregnancy, demand creation with limited supplies, addressing low risk perception, improving materials for illiterate groups, and sustainability planning. Recommendations include more detailed reporting on community mobilization, promoted messages, and interpersonal contact quality and frequency.
Presentation by Christian Ledwell (NAP Global Network) and Cecilia Jones (NAP-Ag) at NAP Expo 2018 in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, as part of the session "Communications Strategies for NAPs."
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AIGNA 10th Birthday Celebrations - A Reflection of 10 yearsanne spencer
The document summarizes the history and activities of the All Ireland Gerontological Nurses Association (AIGNA) over the past 10 years since its inception in 2009. It details how AIGNA started as an idea in 2008 to promote excellence in gerontological nursing across Ireland. It has since grown to include annual conferences, masterclasses, a peer-reviewed journal, social media presence, and a website to further its goals of advancing knowledge and care for older people. Reflections from past AIGNA presidents emphasize the important role it has played in raising the profile of gerontological nursing in Ireland.
Role of Advanced Nurse Practitioner in Gerontological Nursing anne spencer
The role of the registered advanced nurse practitioner (RANP) in gerontological nursing is summarized as follows:
1) RANPs aim to support quality and timely care for older adults by performing comprehensive assessments, planning and initiating treatment, promoting healthy aging and independence, and supporting transition to long-term care.
2) Key roles of RANPs include demonstrating autonomous clinical decision-making and expert practice in managing older adult caseloads, engaging in health promotion, and developing standards of care through research, education, and quality improvement.
3) RANPs work to address the complex health issues of an aging population and support aging in place through programs focused on falls prevention, bone health, chronic
Advancing Gerontological Nursing - Prof A Coffeyanne spencer
This document presents a framework for gerontological nursing competencies developed through a literature review and national focus groups. It identifies six domains of competence: professional nursing, nursing practice and clinical decision making, knowledge and cognitive processes, communication, organization and management, and leadership and professional scholarship. Related standards and cues are provided for each domain. The framework is intended to underpin the development of regulatory requirements, continuing education, and undergraduate curricula to help nurses develop the skills and competencies needed to provide high-quality care for older people.
Advances in gerontological nursing prof b mc cormackanne spencer
This document discusses advances in gerontological nursing over the past 10 years. It notes that while health systems are under pressure, gerontological nurses have significant opportunities to help older people. It outlines key areas of research innovation, including person-centered care, managing frailty, palliative care, and dementia care. However, it also mentions challenges such as a dominance of medical models, risk avoidance attitudes, and lack of clarity around the gerontological nursing role. It raises questions about how nursing can best help older adults flourish and celebrates their strengths and individuality.
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The Absent Voice - the Reality - Dr E Beckanne spencer
The document discusses advance care planning (ACP) for people with dementia living in long-term care settings. It summarizes a study that examined the understanding and experiences of family caregivers, general practitioners, and nursing home staff regarding ACP for dementia patients. The study found poor knowledge of ACP across all groups, especially around legal aspects. Challenges to implementing ACP included concerns about dementia patients' ability to engage and lack of disease-specific guidance. The roles of families, doctors, and nurses in ACP were unclear. The document calls for more research engaging with dementia patients early on to establish their priorities and examine barriers to ACP.
Person Centred Moving and Handling Dr Margaret Smithanne spencer
This document summarizes a participatory action research project aimed at promoting person-centered moving and handling of older patients with osteoporosis. The project had two phases: an action research phase where an online educational module was developed with input from focus groups and then implemented, and a process evaluation phase where staff and patient interviews provided insights. Emerging themes included increased awareness of osteoporosis among staff and its implications for care. A stakeholder conference and creative workshop further explored applying the knowledge through artistic methods. The project concluded enhanced understanding of osteoporosis and uncovered tacit knowledge among practitioners.
Person Centred Moments Donegal - Maura Gillenanne spencer
This document summarizes a project aimed at advancing person-centered care in two dementia units in Donegal, Ireland. A project team used the method of identifying and recording "person-centered moments" over 6 weeks to map interactions onto a person-centered framework. They found 66 moments across both units that demonstrated person-centered processes like engaging authentically and providing holistic care, as well as outcomes like good care experience and feeling of wellbeing. The next steps are to have staff observe interactions between residents and each other to further develop person-centered team processes and shared decision making.
National Suite of Older Persons - Mary Nolananne spencer
This document discusses the development of quality care metrics for older persons in Ireland using a consensus methodology. It describes a four phase study to identify and validate nursing quality care process metrics and indicators for older persons. The phases included a literature review, two rounds of online surveys to develop consensus, and a face-to-face consensus meeting. This resulted in 19 agreed upon older person process metrics and 80 associated indicators to measure quality of older person nursing care. An example metric and what is measured are provided.
National Dementia Strategy Mary Manninganne spencer
The document summarizes the progress and future plans of Ireland's National Dementia Strategy. It outlines 6 priority areas including improving awareness, timely diagnosis, integrated services, training, research, and leadership. It discusses initiatives to date like an awareness campaign, education programs, and home care packages. It also outlines ongoing and future work like establishing standardized diagnostic pathways, developing post-diagnostic support, mapping community services, and clinical guidelines for prescribing medications. The concluding remarks note progress in awareness, education, and pathways, but that continued funding and cultural change is still needed to fully support those with dementia.
Namaste Project presentation Maria Mageeanne spencer
The document provides an overview of the Namaste Care pilot programme between Maria Magee and Silverdale Nursing Home. The programme aimed to improve quality of life for patients with advanced dementia through meaningful sensory activities. A 7-week pilot involved 2-hour Namaste sessions weekly. Evaluations found improvements in scales for agitation, behavior, and depression in residents. Carers reported the programme helped them provide comfort and fond memories. Overall, the programme fostered closer family relationships and intuitive, person-centered care at end of life. Future plans include training more facilitators and sharing the cost-effective model.
Deliriium in Acute Care F Sharkey and A McCloskeyanne spencer
This document discusses efforts to improve delirium awareness, prevention, and management in a trauma and orthopedic unit. It defines delirium and its relationship to dementia. It also provides statistics on dementia prevalence and delirium risk factors. The project aims to educate staff and patients/families about delirium risks and reduce delirium incidence through a person-centered approach. Initial results show staff have increased delirium awareness and are identifying it earlier to provide prompt treatment. Delirium episodes are now being better documented, raising community awareness.
Connectedness and meaningful living on the older adult dr e weathersanne spencer
This document discusses connectedness and meaningful living in older adulthood. It explores how maintaining good relationships and having a sense of purpose can promote better aging. Research shows that social connection and meaning are linked to improved health, well-being, and independence in older age. The document also examines ways to help older adults find meaning, such as through creative activities, volunteering, and community involvement. Even those with cognitive impairment can experience meaning through emotions, humor, and interactions with others. Creating opportunities for contribution and participation can help older adults feel relevant and sustain their social value.
Gerontological Nursing Research in a Time of Changeanne spencer
Keynote presentation given by Dr Catriona Murphy, School of Nursing and Human Sciences, Dublin City University at the 5th Annual Nursing Showcase at St Mary's Hospital, Phoenix Park, Dublin. September 6th 2017.
National Clinical Programme for Older People - Current Developments & Future ...anne spencer
The National Clinical Programme for Older People is working on several initiatives to improve care for older people, including developing an educational framework for nurses, a national frailty education program, a standardized national nursing transfer letter, and work on delirium. The organization is partnering with other clinical programs and stakeholders. Key goals are to increase understanding of frailty, promote interprofessional education, and improve communication and outcomes for older patients.
Pressure Ulceration In Older Adults: Lessons From A Four Year Service Review anne spencer
This document evaluates pressure ulceration in St. Mary's Hospital over a four year period. It finds that 51.4% of pressure ulcers were acquired in the hospital, compared to 48.5% present on admission. Ulcers acquired in the hospital tended to be lower severity and affect non-traditional sites like the feet and heels. The total person time spent with pressure ulcers and associated costs decreased from 2014-2016, suggesting staff education on prevention was effective. Ongoing education is still needed for all staff and carers to address ulcers on admission and prevent ulcers acquired in the hospital.
The Impact Of Nurse-led Medication Reconciliation On Medication Discrepancy D...anne spencer
This presentation summarizes a systematic review on nurse-led medication reconciliation (MedRec) for older adults during care transitions. The review found that MedRec performed by nurses improved detection of medication discrepancies in all 8 included studies. Nurse-led interventions involved structured interviews, home visits, and telephone follow-ups. The review concluded that nurses can substantially reduce medication errors but more high-quality research is still needed to better understand nurses' role in MedRec.
Bone Health and Falls Awareness in Intellectual Disability Population: Empowe...anne spencer
Bone Health and Falls Awareness in Intellectual Disability Population: Empowerment of Peers through Education - Lorraine Ledger, CNMIII, St Michael's House, Dublin
Falls Reduction & Falls Management Quality Improvement Initiative in the Kerr...anne spencer
Falls reduction & falls management quality improvement initiative in the Kerry Community Hospitals/ Nursing Units.
Presentation from 31st August 2017 at Forever Autumn COP Meeting
Cell Therapy Expansion and Challenges in Autoimmune DiseaseHealth Advances
There is increasing confidence that cell therapies will soon play a role in the treatment of autoimmune disorders, but the extent of this impact remains to be seen. Early readouts on autologous CAR-Ts in lupus are encouraging, but manufacturing and cost limitations are likely to restrict access to highly refractory patients. Allogeneic CAR-Ts have the potential to broaden access to earlier lines of treatment due to their inherent cost benefits, however they will need to demonstrate comparable or improved efficacy to established modalities.
In addition to infrastructure and capacity constraints, CAR-Ts face a very different risk-benefit dynamic in autoimmune compared to oncology, highlighting the need for tolerable therapies with low adverse event risk. CAR-NK and Treg-based therapies are also being developed in certain autoimmune disorders and may demonstrate favorable safety profiles. Several novel non-cell therapies such as bispecific antibodies, nanobodies, and RNAi drugs, may also offer future alternative competitive solutions with variable value propositions.
Widespread adoption of cell therapies will not only require strong efficacy and safety data, but also adapted pricing and access strategies. At oncology-based price points, CAR-Ts are unlikely to achieve broad market access in autoimmune disorders, with eligible patient populations that are potentially orders of magnitude greater than the number of currently addressable cancer patients. Developers have made strides towards reducing cell therapy COGS while improving manufacturing efficiency, but payors will inevitably restrict access until more sustainable pricing is achieved.
Despite these headwinds, industry leaders and investors remain confident that cell therapies are poised to address significant unmet need in patients suffering from autoimmune disorders. However, the extent of this impact on the treatment landscape remains to be seen, as the industry rapidly approaches an inflection point.
These lecture slides, by Dr Sidra Arshad, offer a simplified look into the mechanisms involved in the regulation of respiration:
Learning objectives:
1. Describe the organisation of respiratory center
2. Describe the nervous control of inspiration and respiratory rhythm
3. Describe the functions of the dorsal and respiratory groups of neurons
4. Describe the influences of the Pneumotaxic and Apneustic centers
5. Explain the role of Hering-Breur inflation reflex in regulation of inspiration
6. Explain the role of central chemoreceptors in regulation of respiration
7. Explain the role of peripheral chemoreceptors in regulation of respiration
8. Explain the regulation of respiration during exercise
9. Integrate the respiratory regulatory mechanisms
10. Describe the Cheyne-Stokes breathing
Study Resources:
1. Chapter 42, Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, 14th edition
2. Chapter 36, Ganong’s Review of Medical Physiology, 26th edition
3. Chapter 13, Human Physiology by Lauralee Sherwood, 9th edition
Mercurius is named after the roman god mercurius, the god of trade and science. The planet mercurius is named after the same god. Mercurius is sometimes called hydrargyrum, means ‘watery silver’. Its shine and colour are very similar to silver, but mercury is a fluid at room temperatures. The name quick silver is a translation of hydrargyrum, where the word quick describes its tendency to scatter away in all directions.
The droplets have a tendency to conglomerate to one big mass, but on being shaken they fall apart into countless little droplets again. It is used to ignite explosives, like mercury fulminate, the explosive character is one of its general themes.
Does Over-Masturbation Contribute to Chronic Prostatitis.pptxwalterHu5
In some case, your chronic prostatitis may be related to over-masturbation. Generally, natural medicine Diuretic and Anti-inflammatory Pill can help mee get a cure.
Travel vaccination in Manchester offers comprehensive immunization services for individuals planning international trips. Expert healthcare providers administer vaccines tailored to your destination, ensuring you stay protected against various diseases. Conveniently located clinics and flexible appointment options make it easy to get the necessary shots before your journey. Stay healthy and travel with confidence by getting vaccinated in Manchester. Visit us: www.nxhealthcare.co.uk
Osteoporosis - Definition , Evaluation and Management .pdfJim Jacob Roy
Osteoporosis is an increasing cause of morbidity among the elderly.
In this document , a brief outline of osteoporosis is given , including the risk factors of osteoporosis fractures , the indications for testing bone mineral density and the management of osteoporosis
10 Benefits an EPCR Software should Bring to EMS Organizations Traumasoft LLC
The benefits of an ePCR solution should extend to the whole EMS organization, not just certain groups of people or certain departments. It should provide more than just a form for entering and a database for storing information. It should also include a workflow of how information is communicated, used and stored across the entire organization.
5-hydroxytryptamine or 5-HT or Serotonin is a neurotransmitter that serves a range of roles in the human body. It is sometimes referred to as the happy chemical since it promotes overall well-being and happiness.
It is mostly found in the brain, intestines, and blood platelets.
5-HT is utilised to transport messages between nerve cells, is known to be involved in smooth muscle contraction, and adds to overall well-being and pleasure, among other benefits. 5-HT regulates the body's sleep-wake cycles and internal clock by acting as a precursor to melatonin.
It is hypothesised to regulate hunger, emotions, motor, cognitive, and autonomic processes.
DECLARATION OF HELSINKI - History and principlesanaghabharat01
This SlideShare presentation provides a comprehensive overview of the Declaration of Helsinki, a foundational document outlining ethical guidelines for conducting medical research involving human subjects.
Action Research: A Collaborative Approach to Falls Prevention and Management (POSTER)
1. Background: Falls awareness and falls prevention are a priority for health care providers of older adults (DoHC, HSE, NCAOP,
2008). According to the Burden of Care study falls in 2004 cost our economy €402 million and projected to cost €2043 million
by 2030 with our ageing population (Gannon et al, 2008).
Action Research: A Collaborative Approach to Falls Prevention and Management
Daragh Rodger RGN, RNP, RANP, MSc, & Anne Spencer RN, BA (Hons), MSc
Methodology: Action research
taking a multidisciplinary approach
Data collection on falls pre
programme development and
implementation of a new falls
awareness and prevention
programme
Data collection on falls post
implementation of the programme
Results: A reduction in the
number of falls across the campus
by 35%.
A new data measurement – data
collected on the number of
interventions to prevent a potential
fall.
Development of the Forever
Autumn Community of Practice
bringing falls awareness to a wider
audience
Conclusion: Forever Autumn has
placed falls prevention and
management on the agenda within
our healthcare organisation and
beyond. The reduction of falls and
potential falls data is evidence to
our staff of their commitment to
making falls prevention and
management a priority for the
older adults in our care.
Objectives: To raise awareness of
falls among all staff groups.
To enhance the safety of the
patients and residents in our care.
To reduce the costs associated
with falls – financial, physical and
psychological.
www.bonehealth.co www.foreverautumn.co
References
Department of Health & Children. Health Service Executive, National Council on Ageing & Older People (2008) Strategy to Prevent Falls and
Falls Related Injuries
Gannon, B., O'Shea, E. & Hudson, E. (2008) “Economic cost of falls and fractures among older people in Ireland”. Irish Medical Journal, Vol.
101(6)